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Suppose Sen. John McCain, rather than Sen. Barack Obama, won the
presidency but made the same decisions and pursued the same goals to
turn around the economy.

The following is a hypothetical front-page story:

After more than 50 days in office, the new President, even to some of
his supporters, seems overwhelmed by the magnitude of the problems he
faces. Though he calls the economy job one, he confounds critics and
supporters alike with the most audacious, ideologically driven agenda
since the Great Depression, if not in the history of the republic.

He plans to change the role of government in virtually every aspect of
society  from education to health care to job creation to research and
development to fighting "climate change"  all of which call for
drastically higher taxes and spending.

Since the President took office, the Dow Jones industrial average has
plummeted, and unemployment keeps rising. Yet one of his top economic
advisers recently said, "The fundamentals (of the economy) are sound" 
an assessment that drew sharp criticism during the campaign, when the
economic picture looked better.

The President expects his plans to "create or save" millions of jobs.
But by saying "create or save," he virtually protects himself against
failure. During a recent hearing, a senator asked the secretary of
Treasury, "What's a saved job?" The secretary gave a vague, meandering
response about a "rise in unemployment avoided."

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The President promised to end earmarks but signed a pork-laden stimulus
bill that he proclaimed "free of earmarks." Then days later, the
President signed a $410 billion continuing operations budget that
contains almost 9,000 earmark projects.

The President's stimulus package, the constantly changing bailout
package and this year's budget threaten to triple the annual deficit.
The President's new budget (ironically entitled "A New Era of
Responsibility") shows a total federal debt swelling more than 50
percent from 2008 to 2011  almost equaling 2011's gross domestic
product  and continues rising through 2019, the last year in the
budget. Yet the President insists that he crafted the recovery plan "not
because I believe in bigger government. I don't."

During then-President George W. Bush's final weeks in office, Congress
authorized spending $700 billion to prop up banks, purportedly to buy
these troubled or toxic assets. (As chairman of the New York Fed, the
current Treasury secretary actually helped design that package.) But the
banks receiving the most money actually reduced lending, the opposite of
the intended purpose. More troubling, especially for an administration
that promised transparency, the current White House cannot or will not
definitively say how the money was spent and who received it.

Not all bankers even wanted the Troubled Asset Relief Program, with some
critics arguing that without government intervention, the financial
system could have self-corrected. The CEO of Wells Fargo complained that
the government forced his bank into the program and that its mandates
restrict his bank's ability to raise private funding. "Is this America,"
said Chairman Richard Kovacevich, "when you do what your government asks
you to do and then retroactively you also have additional conditions? If
we were not forced to take the TARP money, we would have been able to
raise private capital at that time." As for the President's plan to
"stress test" banks in order to isolate those worthy of bailout money,
Kovacevich called it "asinine."

The President promised to rein in unreasonable executive compensation,
but insurance giant AIG  which received more than $170 billion in
bailout money  plans to pay out $165 million in "guaranteed" bonuses.
An outraged public prompted the President to ask his Treasury secretary
to again attempt to stop or reduce bonuses that AIG's CEO acknowledged
as "distasteful" but defended as legal obligations.

The President's Treasury secretary, who received bipartisan confirmation
despite nonpayment of some taxes, seems confused, not unlike a deer
caught in the headlights. To make matters worse, the new secretary works
as a one-man band. Of the 18 important undersecretary positions, none
has been filled, with only three nominations currently under
consideration. Two highly regarded undersecretary nominees abruptly
withdrew their names, including one who many felt possessed significant
expertise necessary to help the Treasury secretary explain and implement
the administration's policies.

The failure to staff may be an unintended consequence of the President's
executive order restricting the conditions under which former lobbyists
can serve in government. The President has granted  so far  two
dozen waivers to this policy. Yet the head of Britain's civil service,
Sir Gus O'Donnell, tried, by phone, to contact key Treasury personnel in
preparation for the upcoming G-20 summit. The phones just rang. "There
is nobody there," said O'Donnell.

The President's supporters speak of his enormous "popularity." But his
sliding favorability numbers put him on par with former President George
W. Bush at this point in their initial terms.